I was picked up here at the res at 6:40 this morning for a two hour drive out to Kleinbaai; a small town east of Cape Town on the coast, famous for its Great White Shark tours and home of White Shark Projects, the company that runs the tour I went on that also does conservation work and research on Great Whites. The scenery out was lovely, and the breakfast included in our day, as well as the coffee, was greatly appreciated.
There were forty people total in the group: a mixture of International study abroad kids like myself from UCT; other Americans on vacation; and a family of Germans (who were really hard-core and brought their own gear with them! I had no idea that diving was popular in Germany...?). Once briefed, we were escorted down to the waterfront to board t

The boat passed safely by the rocks and we set anchor with the side of the boat into the wind so that the chum, or dead fish soup, would float away from the boat to attract the sharks. It's actually illegal to feed the sharks, so what the crew does is throw the chum into the water and use a piece of tuna tied to a rope and a wood and foam seal decoy to get the sharks close to the boat and the cage for optimal viewing. The crew then lowered the cage into the water, which is attached to the side of the boat at all times and allows viewers to hold their heads above water while the lookout keeps an eye out for sharks. When he spots one coming, he directs the divers to look and everyone dives under, keeping all appendages within the bars of course. While the dive suits are thick, that water temperature was about 14 degrees Celsius, so it's pretty freaking cold, but once the first shark appears you really don't pay attention to the water temp. Within minutes of anchoring and setting the cage, the first shark appeared, and divers were settled into the cage. Even from the deck of the boat you can get a good view of the animals: their da

When I actually got into the water I was so excited and cold that I wasn't really scared at all, which was surprising. I went half-sies on an underwater camera with another guy on the tour, so he took the pictures while we saw two different sharks making passes at the bait. One seemed smaller (I say this with a sense of irony: all Great Whites are huge) and had several deep scars on his head, maki

The sharks were literally close enough to touch at points, and it was absolutely amazing being in their environment with them. As much as people are so afraid of them and make them into such monsters, I was just enthralled by how graceful and beautiful they were.
This exper

PS though: bring some Dramamine or something, 'cause even when they say the water's "as calm as a lake," you're going to feel nauseous by the end of the day. I swear my chair is rocking right now and it's not a rocking chair :/
So cool, glad you are having so many amazing adventures. The boys got to swim with the sharks in HI but i don't believe they where great whites. Still it was very cool. Love the pictures and again so glad you are making so many memories. Stay safe have fun and talk with you again soon. Love you.
ReplyDeleteAHHH that's so cool! I was just catching up on your recent entries between my classes; and I can't believe how many amazing things there are to do there! Even though running to get on trains isn't as cool as it is in action movies, I totally would have taken the chance to be in the water with sharks. I can't wait to see what comes of the underwater film :]
ReplyDeleteSuper Cool! I can't imagine what it was like to see such big fish up close. My fish tanks suddenly seem so inadequate :) And I'm glad to hear that you could make a successful old-school hobo with the train jumping skills, haha. Have a great weekend and good luck with the start of classes!
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